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Personal Statements
Each application service has room for a personal statement, and each
has its own instructions. The following are excerpts from the application
instructions for each application service:
- AMCAS
“This is your opportunity to provide personal information
that is otherwise not included on the application. Consider and construct
your comments carefully; many admissions committees place significant
weight on this section.”
- AACOMAS
“We encourage you to provide your motivation for applying
to the field of osteopathic medicine in this section.”
- AADSAS
“Your Applicant Essay provides an opportunity to explain why you
desire to pursue a dental education.”
- VMCAS
“Your personal statement should help the admission committee(s)
learn something about you as a person, about the development of your
interest in veterinary medicine, and about your career goals.”
- AACPMAS
“State below why you are interested in becoming a Doctor of Podiatric
Medicine. Provide any additional significant information to your application,
e. g., experience in a health care delivery setting”
This is your opportunity to expound upon experiences that you have had
that did not go anywhere else on the application, or which you did not
get a chance to describe in enough detail. You volunteered a lot
of hours, but what kind of experiences did you gain from it? How
did your experiences motivate you even further to pursue this career?
What unique qualities/experiences do you/have you had that you would like
the committee to know about? The following suggestions will be helpful:
- Proofread the essay before and after copying and pasting to your application!
Copying and pasting from Word or other word processing programs can
sometimes cause formatting errors, check your statement carefully before
submitting it.
- Quality is more important than quantity.
- Make sure the essay is legible. Do not squeeze the lines together
to make a long essay fit – please shorten the essay.
- Have others read your essay. Ask them to comment not only on
grammatical errors, but also on what kind of person the essay makes
you sound like. Do you sound sincere?
- If explaining anything negative on your application (such as a bad
semester, conduct probation, etc.), be open and honest. Mention
the facts and move on. Explain your side of the story, but do
not make excuses.
- Creativity and quality are important, but you are not expected to
write a masterpiece. It should be apparent that you can express
yourself well, but do not try to “woo” the admissions committee
with big words and elaborate descriptions. You should sound like
a real person!
- Try to stick with why you are interested in medicine, what you have
done in the field, etc. Do not try to use this as an essay to
review the medical field, its’ strengths, weaknesses, current
trends, etc. This essay is so they learn about you, not the field
of medicine.
- If you are reapplying, write a new personal statement. Show
that you are willing to put some effort into your new application.
Tips for Writing Your Health Profession
Personal Statement ( PDF )
Personal Statement Links
Winning Personal Statements
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